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Cynthia Young has juggled two careers simultaneously in radio and the hotel industry for the better part of two decades including a longtime stint on the airwaves of Atlanta's KISS 104. On LSH, she discusses how making peace with struggles that arise in life has helped her to move forward, grief after the passing of most of her immediate family, finding her voice and how it's all interwoven in her relationship with God. #peace #healthyself #acourseinmiracles #atlantaradio #letsstarthealingpodcast #letsstarthealing #findingyourvoice
How do you professionalize an organization? When and how does a Board decide that an organization is ready for a large technology overhaul? And does color matter when it comes to conference merchandise? (Hint: the answer is yes!)In this episode of Associations Thrive, host Joanna Pineda interviews Cynthia Young, Executive Director of the American Art Therapy Association. Cynthia introduces AATA, talks about her journey to becoming ED of AATA, and then discusses the things AATA is doing to grow and thrive. Cynthia discusses:What art therapy is and how it's different from talk therapyHow patients don't need to be good at art for art therapy to be effectiveHow becoming ED of AATA was her first chief exec job AND her first association jobThe amazing support she's received from the association communityHow the Board came to decide on a large overhaul of AATA technologyHow AATA's new website, membership database and community helped the organization thrive during the pandemicThe DE&I aspect of AATA: while art therapists serve a hugely diverse set of clients, art therapists tend to be white and femaleHow AATA gave student members the ability to voteHow AATA went from having one membership meeting a year, to six all-member meetings a yearHow AATA members seem to love the color purple, so Cynthia is sure to always sell purple merchandise at conferenceReferences:American Art Therapy AssociationAmericans for the Arts
This is the fifth season of the series of sessions with Industry professionals who can inspire young minds towards this crazy and exciting world through their life journeys. This season, we go back to the original concept of knowing the life journey of our guest speakers in the advertising and marketing world. In this third episode of the 5th season series, our guest speaker is Ms. Cynthia Young, Program Coordinator-Content Strategy, Humber College, Canada, and a graduate of York University.
This is the fifth season of the series of sessions with Industry professionals who can inspire young minds towards this crazy and exciting world through their life journeys. This season, we go back to the original concept of knowing the life journey of our guest speakers in the advertising and marketing world. In this third episode of the 5th season series, our guest speaker is Ms. Cynthia Young, Program Coordinator-Content Strategy, Humber College, Canada, and a graduate of York University.
Welcome to another episode of the Wake Up Call Podcast where I intrever Cynthia Young. She is a specialist in Fung Shui. Listen to her inspirational story of how she moved from scare city to abundace. Feng Shui service is an act of trusting the process that the Universe has set in motion for you! To get full consultation you can contact Cynthia via the following: asteyastudios.com cynthiayoung.az@gmail.com 978-771-1002 or Instagram @asteyastudios-feng shui --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/leocrystalqueenpodcast/message
The LMS is, without a doubt, an indispensable tool in higher education. But how do we maintain a human centred approach to pedagogy? As Humber moves to Blackboard Ultra, Cynthia Young and Mark Karam explore strategies to ensure that your LMS design reflects your teaching philosophy and process. https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/howd-we-get-here/id1507626884 http://humbergalleries.ca/cynthia-young https://humber.ca/staff/announcement/2021-humber-innovation-year-winners @edTechXD
Thank you for listening to another episode of the Entrepreneurs Sushi Club Podcast. We would like to know, what has been your biggest take away from the conversation?Do take a moment and share this with us in our Facebook group The Entrepreneurs Sushi Club. You will find the link in the description of this episode.If you know someone who will benefit from listening to this episode, please do share it with them.
“Une histoire mondiale des femmes photographes”sous la direction de Luce Lebart et Marie RobertLes Éditions TextuelPODCAST – Interview de Luce Lebart, historienne de la photographie, correspondante française pour la collection Archive of Modern Conflict, et de Marie Robert, conservatrice en chef au musée d'Orsay, chargée de la collection de photographies, directrices de livre ”Une histoire mondiale des femmes photographes” aux éditions Textuel,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, enregistrement réalisé par téléphone, entre Paris et la Région parisienne, le 10 novembre 2020, durée 32'16. © FranceFineArt.HOME | EDITION | “UNE HISTOIRE MONDIALE DES FEMMES PHOTOGRAPHES” SOUS LA DIRECTION DE LUCE LEBART ET MARIE ROBERT “Une histoire mondiale des femmes photographes” sous la direction de Luce Lebart et Marie RobertPartage“Une histoire mondiale des femmes photographes”sous la direction de Luce Lebart et Marie RobertLes Éditions TextuelÉditions TextuelPODCAST – Interview de Luce Lebart, historienne de la photographie, correspondante française pour la collection Archive of Modern Conflict, et de Marie Robert, conservatrice en chef au musée d'Orsay, chargée de la collection de photographies, directrices de livre ”Une histoire mondiale des femmes photographes” aux éditions Textuel,par Anne-Frédérique Fer, enregistrement réalisé par téléphone, entre Paris et la Région parisienne, le 10 novembre 2020, durée 32'16. © FranceFineArt.Couverture de Une histoire mondiale des femmes photographessous la direction de Luce Lebart et Marie Robert aux éditions Textuel, 2020. Photographie de Pushpamala N. © Pushpamala N.Newsha Tavakolian,Portrait de Negin à Téhéran,2010. © Newsha Tavakolian / Magnum Photos.Pamela Singh,Carte au trésor 022,1994-1995, peinte en 2015. Courtesy © Pamela Singh and sepiaEYE.Elisabeth Hase,Sans titre [femme sous la douche],vers 1932-1933. © Estate of Elisabeth Hase, Courtesy Robert Mann Gallery.Edith Watson,Dans le détroit [Vue d'un iceberg],Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador, Canada, 16-23 août 1913. © Edith S. Watson / Bibliothe`que et Archives Canada [e010791398].Anna Atkins,Alaria esculenta, extrait de Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions,1849-1850. © The New York Public Library.Extrait du communiqué de presseUne fabuleuse somme collective, un livre manifeste, un ouvrage de référence.Cet ouvrage illustré par 450 images, présente les œuvres de 300 femmes photographes du monde entier, de l'invention du médium jusqu'à l'aube du XXIe siècle. Rares sont celles dont les noms sont parvenus jusqu'à nous, disparaissant du récit de la création au profit des « grands maîtres ».L'effacement des femmes dans l'histoire de la photographie résulte d'une longue tradition de discrédit. Créatrices originales et autonomes, elles n'ont pourtant cessé de documenter, d'interroger et de transfigurer le monde, démontrant que l'appareil photo peut être un fantastique outil d'émancipation. Aucune expérimentation ni aucun fracas des XIXe et XXe siècles ne leur ont ainsi échappé. Pour restituer la diversité des parcours de ces femmes photographes, Luce Lebart et Marie Robert ont invité 162 autrices de différents points du globe à nourrir cet ouvrage manifeste.La recherche dirigée par Marie Robert et Luce Lebart a été réalisée grâce au soutien des Rencontres d'Arles et de Women In Motion, un programme de Kering qui met en lumière la place des femmes dans les arts et la culture.Cet ouvrage bénéficie du soutien du ministère de la Culture, du ministère délégué chargé de l'Égalité entre les femmes et les hommes, de la Diversité et de l'égalité des chances ainsi que de la région Île-de-France.Actualité – Dans le cadre de Femmes photographes – Une histoire de la photographie à réinventer – Une proposition de Fannie Escoulen, commissaire d'exposition indépendante spécialisée en photographie contemporaine. Quatre rendez-vous sur Instagram live, du 11 au 14 novembre, à 11 h, à suivre sur @ParisPhotoFair.Le 14 novembre 2020 à partir de 14 h 15Discussions et rencontres autour de la sortie de l'ouvrage manifeste Une Histoire mondiale des femmes photographes (éditions Textuel). Une somme collective, codirigée par Luce Lebart et Marie Robert, présentant les oeuvres de 300 femmes photographes du monde entier, de l'invention du médium jusqu'à l'aube du XXIe siècle.à 14 h 15Introduction de la rencontre par Agnès Saal, haute fonctionnaire à la diversité et à l'égalité au ministère de la Culture.de 14 h 30 à 15 h 30Discussion entre Luce Lebart, historienne de la photographie, commissaire d'exposition et chercheuse pour la collection Archive of Modern Conflict, et Marie Robert, conservatrice en chef au musée d'Orsay, avec Marianne Théry, directrice des éditions Textuel. Modération par Fannie Escoulen. Diffusion en live sur Youtube. Plus d'infos sur ellesxparisphoto.com.Luce Lebart est historienne de la photographie, commissaire d'exposition et correspondante française pour la collection Archive of Modern Conflict (Londres-Toronto). Elle a notamment écrit Les Grands Photographes du XXe siècle (Larousse, 2017) et publié Les Silences d'Atget (Textuel, 2016).Marie Robert est conservatrice en chef au musée d'Orsay depuis 2011, chargée de la collection de photographies. Elle a été co-commissaire des expositions « Qui a peur des femmes photographes ? » et « Splendeurs et Misères. Images de la prostitution ».Les 162 autrices : Alix Agret, Andrea Aguad, Line Ajan, Alina Akoeff, Damarice Amao, Bérénice Angremy, Irini Apostolou,, Georgia Atienza, Marie Auger, Sarah Bay Gachot, Marion Beckers, Sophie Bertrand, Hélène Bocard, Clara Bolin, Daria Bona, Joëlle Bonardi, Mattie Boom, Clara Bouveresse, Dominique Brebion, Susanna Brown, Nocebo Bucibo, River Encalada Bullock, Laurence Butet-Roch, Marine Cabos-Brullé, Molly Caenwyn, Yudit Caplan, Éléonore Challine, Virginie Chardin, Héloïse Conésa, Julie Crooks, Marta Dahó, Aldeide Delgado, Lourdes Delgado, Françoise Denoyelle, Delphine Desveaux, Deepali Dewan, Helen Ennis, Esa Epstein, Heloisa Espada, Monika Faber, Adama Delphine Fawundu, Anaïs Feyeux, Kateryna Filyuk, Eva Fisli, Orla Fitzpatrick, Clare Freestone, Lena Fritsch, Susana Gállego Cuesta, Katarzyna Gębarowska, Anahita Ghabaian Etehadieh, Hélène Giannecchini, Marta Gili, Pamela Glasson Roberts, Bettina Gockel, Laura González-Flores, Maria Gourieva, Kristen Gresh, Rebekka Grossmann, Laetitia Guillemin, Natalya Guzenko Boudier, Sophie Hackett, Awel Haouati, Melissa Harris, Sabine Hartmann, Yining He, Charlene Heath, Elina Heikka, Nathalie Herschdorfer, Lisa Hostetler, Candice Jansen, Sabina Jaskot-Gill, Victoria Jonathan, Julie Jones, Maria Kapajeva, Malavika Karlekar, Magda Keaney, Corey Keller, Rym Khene, Sara Knelman, Monika E. Kupfer, Paula Kupfer, Cat Lachowskyj, Anne Lacoste, Annabelle Lacour, Martha Langford, Sylvie Lécallier, Sigrid Lien, Joanne Lukitsh, Anne Lyden, Lola Mac Dougall, Sandra Maunac, Shoair Mavlian, Anne Maxwell, Margarida Medeiros, Ieva Meilutė-Svinkūnienė, Jasmin Meinold, Jeanne Mercier, Christelle Michel, George Mind, Tanvi Mishra, Fulufhelo Mobadi, Elisabeth Moortgat, Gaëlle Morel, Victoria Munro, Federica Muzzarelli, Yasmine Nachabe Taan, Suryanandini Narain, Constantia Nicolaides, Nestan Nijaradze, Érika Nimis, Anne O'Hehir, Pippa Oldfield, Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Daria Panaiotti, Nikoo Paydar, Deniz Pehlivaner, Penelope Petsini, Claudia Polledri, Carolina Ponce de Léon, Karolina Puchała-Rojek, Kateryna Radchenko, Helihanta Rajaonarison, Zsófia Rátkai, Martine Ravache, Scarlett Reliquet, Raisa Rexer, Núria F. Rius, Hilary Roberts, Julie Robinson, Mette Sandbye, Franziska Schmidt, Gabriele Schor, Letta Shtohryn, Æsa Sigurjónsdóttir, Nani Simonis, Agnès Sire, Karen Smith, Abigail Solomon-Godeau, Anna Sparham, Zoë Tousignant, Flora Triebel, Aliki Tsirgialou, Silvia Valisa, Arola Valls Bofill, Pauline Vermare, Dominique Versavel, Hripsimé Visser, Sonia Voss, Francesca Wilmott, Demet Yildiz, Cynthia Young, Oksana Zaboujko, Maria Zagala, Erika Zerwes et Karolina Ziębińska-Lewandowska. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Christine Reid of the North Shore Mountain Bike Association (NSMBA) discusses diversity and what it means to be a woman in Mountain Biking with guests: Cynthia Young of the NSMBA, Amanda Schulze, Brand Strategist and Founder of Lithia Effect and Danielle Baker, Freelance Writer and Communications Manager at BC Bike Race. https://podcasts-1.feedpress.co/16677/Ep%2045%20-%202018-07-05%2C%2015.22%20.mp3 Show Notes & Links … Continue reading "Ep 45 – New Voices for Mountain Biking: A Women’s Round Table Discussion"
How much do I tip a Barista, how long should I hang out in this coffee shop, is it cool if I park here, is Starbucks making local coffee shop Baristas want to shoot their brains out? Cynthia answers some of the question I often wonder when I am getting coffee. We always end with a poop story
Cynthia Young revisits Living Well to share selections from Cynthology: A Collection of Rhymes. Young has actually authored three separate books in her Cynthology collection. Book 2 is entitled, Electrified and Book 3, Shades of Cyn. Memoirs of a Caregiver was featured on our last podcast. Cynthia shared her journey as a caregiver to four family members stricken with Alzheimer’s disease. If you missed it, you will want to go to the archives. She provides encouragement and insight into how the disease progresses and gradually destroys the memory and abilities to learn, reason, make sound judgments, communicate, and carry out daily activities. The end of today's broadcast was interrupted but here's how you can reach Cynthia and/or purchase her work: Phone: (951) 205-9810 Fax: (951) 371-6707 E-mail: cyoungbooks@gmail.com Memoirs of a Caregiver available at: www.iuniverse.com www.amazon.com www.barnesandnoble.com www.googleplaystore.com Cynthology: A Collection of Rhymes available at: www.authorhouse.com www.amazon.com www.barnesandnoble.com www.googleplaystore.com
Cynthia Young is a published author who currently resides in Southern California. She will be our guest on consecutive programs, September 12th and again September 26th. Both podcasts will focus on her helpful literary contributions. Cynthia wrote Memoirs of a Caregiver to share her journey as a caregiver to four family members stricken with Alzheimer’s disease. Being a long distance caregiver comes with many challenges and Young writes about them and the struggles and triumphs that she encountered along the way. Three other books chronicle life, as she sees it, via collections of rhyme. For most families, having just one member afflicted with Alzheimer's can be devastating. In her poignant memoir, Cynthia shares her story of love and devotion as she learns how to care for four family members stricken with Alzheimer's disease, over a ten-year period. Young narrates a journey filled with laughter, challenges, and sorrow as she commutes from California to Michigan to care for her mother, two aunts, and a cousin. She provides insight into how the disease progresses and gradually destroys the memory and abilities to learn, reason, make sound judgments, communicate, and carry out daily activities. Join us as we have an open and candid discussion that will extend beyond the normal 15 minute segment. During Cynthia's second appearance, we will look forward to her unraveling some of the rhymes found in her first collection, Cynthology: A Collection of Rhymes.
Voigt, Cynthia. YOUNG FREDLE
Drawing on recent U.S. television series “The Unit” and “Sleeper Cells,” Cynthia Young examines recent shifts in media representations of African American men, arguing that in the context of the “war on terror,” the image of the criminal and anti-social young black male has mutated into the image of the black patriot, at war against a new enemy of the nation, the Muslim terrorist. Exploring the figure of the black soldier, her work asks the questions: What kind of popular culture is made in the context of war? How do notions of civil rights shift in a post-Civil Rights era? And when and how are such notions mobilized in service to violent and racist conceptions of Iraqis, Arabs, and other Muslims? In his commentary, Visiting Scholar Anamik Saha will draw upon his research on popular cultural representations of South Asians and Muslims in Britain during the same period. Cynthia Young is an Associate Professor of English and African and African Diaspora Studies at Boston College where she teaches courses on literature and popular culture. She received her B.A. from Columbia University and her Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University. Her book on U.S. Third World Leftists, Soul Power, was published by Duke University Press in 2006. She is currently working on a project that considers race, specifically blackness, after the September 11 attacks. Interrogating popular culture and political organizing sites, this project considers how the Civil Rights legacy has been hijacked by Conservatives supporting an anti-immigrant, pro-war and often white supremacist agenda.